Needless to say, completing this project was an amazing experience for me. I can not rave enough about what a wonderful time that I had teaching technology and watching my specific eighteen third graders grow by leaps and bounds in only the short time we have been together. It has reignited my love for video production and continued to feed the desire I have always had to help change the world. Seeing the students so passionate and involved was just awesome.
When thinking about take-aways from this project, it is hard for me to select just four.
- Students are more passionate to help the world than I would ever have expected. We all always tend to assume and understand the issue that children are egocentric. We know that they have trouble thinking of anyone other then themselves. However, as children constantly continue to do, they will surprise you. I expected to need to motivate them extensively to get them to care about others. Boy, was I wrong! They see problems in the world daily. They take notice and want to make a change. I underestimated the level of social awareness and compassion that students can have even at such a young age.
- Students LOVE technology. No matter what it was, my students were obsessed with working with technology. They ran to computers, pawed at IFlips, and couldn’t get enough of being in the camera’s spotlight. They wanted to learn and begged me to teach them how to work every aspect of Imovie. I couldn’t get to them fast enough! Throughout my career as a preservice teacher, I have always read about what a motivator technology is, but I had no idea until I actually experienced it.
- Constructivism has its limits. One of our main goals when implementing this project was that it be entirely student designed and created. We wanted them to do all the work and have all the credit. This was intended to be completely their project with the teachers serving only as facilitators and resources. We wanted them to advertise, get the word out and be responsible for collecting donations. However, what we failed to consider was the fact that third graders are eight and nine years old. They don’t keep their own schedules, aren’t in charge of decisions and rarely have little control over anything more than their outfit or lunch selection. Asking them to coordinate a donation drive completely on their own was unrealistic. They needed our help. So, although they more than surpassed our expectations, I realized that as an adult teacher, there are still some aspects of their learning that I will need to be responsible for.
- Collaboration is AMAZING. Working with my team this semester has been an amazing experience. In addition to the experiences with the children, I have learned so much from my teammates. We have shared ideas and thoughts and I finally get the intoxicating feeling of professional collaboration. Listening to others’ ideas and using them to incorporate into mine was so justifying and meaningful. I was able to have my own professional freedom, all while learning and working with teachers that I deeply respect.
Suggestions for improvement:
- Provide examples. I think that at first, the project was very confusing and ambiguous. Visual examples would really have helped teams to understand their task and get more excited about it.
- Prepare students for the worst. It seems like the majority of the groups went into the school with eyes bright, expecting inviting teachers that were both excited and dedicated to the project success. For many of the groups, this was not the case. They were blindsided by pushed back meetings, unenthusiastic mentors and minimal classroom time. Preparing future classes for ALL types of circumstances could help give the initial motivation needed to preserver against all obstacles.
- Be involved at the school. I’m not sure if it is possible, but personally, I really would have liked to had some interaction together as a class or with you at the actual school. I think that that may have alleviated a great deal of stress and anxiety that some groups had, as well as made us all feel more connected to you as an instructor. I loved the class and know that constructivism is the ultimate goal, but I feel that preservice teachers are not so very different from third graders. They need to be constantly assured that they are doing their assignment correctly and need to have scaffolded instruction. I think that being more physically involved at the beginning and most confusing portion of the project then gradually tapering off of the project would really help ease some tension and worry. :)
- More authentic documentation. I would liked to have had more of an authentic method for demonstrating and cataloging our progress and learning within the course. I think that adding a student selected method of evaluation, such as a video blog, website creation, ongoing podcast would have been more meaningful assessments than the Thursday Round-Ups and Reading Journals. I know that personally, I found it a little frustrating to have so much video and lesson planning documentation of my progress but then have to take the time to write out a learning log. I would rather have been able to post my productions of the day or even the lesson plan that was used during that week. I love the idea of a blog, but think that all of our projects were so diverse that differing ongoing assessments would have been more relatable.
Overall, as I said, I had an amazing experience within the course and had countless takeaways. I now feel so much more confident to teach my students each something different that they are interested in as well as to introduce a brand new set of technologies to them. I learned a great deal and am very proud of the work that my team and I did. Thanks for a great class!!